Chapter 1: Chapter 1
The apartment was on fire.
A chunk of the ceiling crashed down. I shielded my son as the debris gashed my head.
My husband—the firefighter—kicked in the door. He had one oxygen mask.
My son cried out, “Dad, save Auntie Viveca first! She's sick!”
So my husband gave the mask to his childhood sweetheart.
I fumbled for my inhaler. It was empty. “I’m pregnant! Hate me if you want, Alistair, but you can’t let our baby die!”
“Don't lie.” My husband just scoffed and swept the other woman into his arms.
A girl pulled me from the wreckage. I lost the baby. The first thing I did was file for divorce.
My adopted daughter and I were starting over.
Then my ex-husband and my son showed up at our new apartment.
Kneeling. Begging me to come home.
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1
On my son Asher’s birthday, my husband invited his childhood sweetheart, Viveca, over, saying he wanted to take Asher to a basketball game.
“No,” I said, planting myself in the doorway.
We were at a standoff. Moments later, the hallway of our Capitol Hill apartment building exploded in flames.
A piece of plasterboard fell from the ceiling. I felt a sharp blow to the back of my head, and warm blood instantly blurred my vision. But my son, Asher, huddled beneath me, was completely unharmed.
My husband, Alistair, was a firefighter. He charged in, but he secured his only spare breathing mask over Viveca’s face.
“Auntie Viveca has claustrophobia and a panic disorder! Dad, get her out of here! Mom, you can wait for the others to rescue you!”
A bitter, blood-stained smile twisted my lips as I stared at them.
Had they both forgotten I have severe asthma? Without a mask, I would die in here.
Amidst the roaring flames, I watched helplessly as my husband, Alistair, clutched another woman in his arms and sprinted for the exit.
And my son, Asher—the child I’d nearly died to bring into this world—played the little gentleman, carefully supporting Viveca, terrified she might stumble.
Neither of them glanced back at me.
An overwhelming, bone-chilling sorrow consumed me. I was his wife. His family. Yet in that life-or-death moment, they had abandoned me without a second thought.
Just half an hour earlier, Viveca had knocked on our door.
I hadn’t let her in, but Asher, who was playing video games in his room, heard the commotion.
He rushed out, shoved me aside, and then cheerfully took Viveca’s hand, leading her toward the door.
A sharp pain lanced through my chest. I tried to stop them.
But Asher bit down hard on my arm, his eyes filled with venom.
“Why can’t I go with Auntie Viveca?”
“If it weren’t for you, Auntie Viveca would be my mom! I wish you would just die!”
The bloody imprint of his teeth on my arm was a testament to his hatred.
It was during this confrontation that the fire broke out.
We were trapped, waiting for rescue.
Asher didn’t even glance my way. He stayed by Viveca’s side, comforting her. “Auntie Viveca, don’t be scared. You’re very important to Dad. He’ll definitely come save you first.”
My heart shattered. For seven long years, I thought I could have warmed even a stone.
But not him. For me, he had only hatred.
He hated that I wouldn’t buy him the latest game console, hated that I wouldn’t let him on his phone until his homework was done.
But most of all, he hated that I refused to let Viveca be his mother.
Even so, when that piece of plasterboard came crashing down, I had lunged without hesitation, shielding him with my own body.
The board had cut through my scalp, and blood was pouring out. Yet he pushed me away, grabbed Viveca’s hand, and anxiously asked if she was frightened.
Alistair burst in wearing a respirator. He held the only spare mask and went straight to Viveca.
“Dad, save Auntie Viveca first! She’s not well!”
“Mom looks okay. She can wait for the other firefighters.”
Tears streamed down my soot-stained face. A bleak smile touched my lips as I held up the small canister. “My asthma inhaler is almost empty. I won’t last long in this smoke.”
Seven years ago today, I was on the brink of death from a postpartum hemorrhage.
Before I lost consciousness, I grabbed Alistair’s hand and begged him to save the baby, no matter what.
If he had to choose, he had to choose the child.
I fought with all my might to give birth to him. And today, that same child was clutching Alistair’s hand, begging him to save someone else.
Alistair held Viveca and glanced at me coldly. “Marceline, you owe Viveca this. Just wait a little longer. My colleagues will be here soon.”
My survival instinct took over. I grabbed his sleeve, my voice a desperate scream, “Alistair, I’m pregnant! You can hate me, but you can’t kill our baby!”
Alistair’s whole body stiffened. He’d been home so rarely, I hadn’t found the right time to tell him.
Seeing his father hesitate, Asher angrily pried my fingers away.
“Mom, how can you be so selfish! How could you lie to Dad about something like this?”
Viveca, nestled in Alistair’s arms, was sobbing pitifully.
Alistair’s expression instantly turned to ice. Then, he shoved me away violently and rushed out with Viveca in his arms.
The thick smoke completely engulfed me. My breathing became a searing pain.
The inhaler in my hand was empty.
I took one last, scorching breath and closed my eyes in despair.
A profound bitterness washed over me.
I should never have gotten into this relationship. It was a mistake from the very beginning.